|
|
|
|
|
by blindseer
277 days ago
|
|
I would really like to see more people who have never written C++ before port a Rust program to C++. In my opinion, one can argue it may be easy to port initially but it is an order of magnitude more complex to maintain. Whereas the other around, porting a C++ program to Rust without knowing Rust is challenging initially (to understand the borrow checker) but orders of magnitude easier to maintain. Couple that with easily being about to `cargo add` dependencies and good language server features, and the developer experience in Rust blows C++ out of the water. I will grant that change is hard for people. But when working on a team, Rust is such a productivity enhancer that should be a no-brainer for anyone considering this decision. |
|
The funniest thing happened when I needed to compile a C file as part of a little Rust project, and it turned out one of the _easiest_ ways I've experienced of compiling a tiny bit of C (on Windows) was to put it inside my Rust crate and have cargo do it via a C compiler crate.